The solar wind is found by Parker Solar Probe (PSP) to be abundant with Alfvenic velocity spikes and magnetic field kinks. Temperature enhancement is another remarkable feature associated with the Alfvenic spikes. How the prototype of these coincident phenomena is generated intermittently in the source region becomes a hot topic of wide concerns. Here we propose a new model introducing guide-field discontinuity into the interchange magnetic reconnection between open funnels and closed loops with different magnetic helicities. The modified interchange reconnection model not only can accelerate jet flows from the newly opening closed loop but also excite and launch Alfvenic wave pulses along the newly-reconnected and post-reconnected open flux tubes. We find that the modeling results can reproduce the following observational features: (1) Alfven disturbance is pulsive in time and asymmetric in space; (2) Alfvenic pulse is compressible with temperature enhancement and density variation inside the pulse. We point out that three physical processes co-happening with Alfven wave propagation can be responsible for the temperature enhancement: (a) convection of heated jet flow plasmas (decrease in density), (b) propagation of compressed slow-mode waves (increase in density), and (c) conduction of heat flux (weak change in density). We also suggest that the radial nonlinear evolution of the Alfvenic pulses should be taken into account to explain the formation of magnetic switchback geometry.